| Michael Gurstein on Wed, 22 Apr 2015 22:21:18 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> Another Example of "Multistakeholder Governance" in |
With links (which are probably necessary to make useful sense of the
argument below) see:
https://gurstein.wordpress.com/2015/04/19/another-example-of-multistakeholder-governance-in-action-the-global-cyberspace-15-unicorn/
http://tinyurl.com/ptxatgy
Michael Gurstein
@michaelgurstein
Another Example of "Multistakeholder Governance" in Action:
The Global CyberSpace 15 Unicorn
The Global Conference on Cyber Space 15 (GCCS) has just concluded in
the Hague, Holland.
Of course, there are a dozen conferences a week on the Internet, the
Digital World, Cyberspace and so on. But this one was meant to be
slightly different. Not just a run-of-the-mill trade show, or a
trotting out of show-boating pilot projects or demo's, or folks
developing positions for pursuing their interests in Cyber Space...
No, this one was meant, well, to have gravitas... to be a collection of
sympathetic governments and the full panoply of "stakeholders" and thus
to have some sort of broader impact on Global Governance of the
Internet (and thus dear readers, or at least those who haven't spent
the last five years in a cave, an impact on the on-going global
governance of all and everything.)
So this is how the conference describes itself:
On 16 and 17 April 2015 representatives of governments, international
organisations, businesses, civil society, academia and the technical
community gathered in The Hague, the Netherlands, to discuss key
developments in the cyber domain with a view to presenting a
forward-looking agenda to promote a free, open and secure cyberspace.
The Conference has taken stock of key developments in the various
fields and has offered a platform for presenting and discussing
important issues for the near future. It aims to be a catalyst for
discussions on key aspects of the cyber domain, presenting an
integrated strategic view of the issues. We welcome the general
agreement that there is an urgent need for international cooperation on
cyber issues among all stakeholders.
The use of ICTs, and in particular the Internet, has become a matter of
strategic importance for governments, businesses and citizens alike.
Governed through a partnership between all stakeholders concerned, the
Internet is an engine for economic growth and social development that
facilitates communication, innovation, research and business
transformation.
The Conference reaffirmed its commitment to the multistakeholder model
of Internet governance and called upon all stakeholders to further
strengthen and encourage the sustainability of, participation in and
evolution of this model.
From the beginning of the London process, through Budapest and Seoul,
there has been a growing commitment to cooperation among stakeholders.
Governments were urged to ensure that cyber policy at national,
regional and international level is developed through multistakeholder
approaches, including civil society, the technical community,
businesses and governments across the globe. Only then can the
increasingly complex cyber challenges be fully addressed. To ensure
that the Conference reflected the above principles, the Netherlands
facilitated the organisation of a civil society pre-conference. The
participants encouraged future editions of the Global Conference on
Cyberspace to include a civil society pre-event.
To unpack what is being said a bit. The conference is endorsing the
multistakeholder governance model. The conference has now organized
itself to include the range of "stakeholders" i.e. including "Civil
Society" and thus has now entered (through this laying on of "civil
society's" legitimizing hands), into that sacred state of
"multistakeholderism" where the shackles of ordinary modes of
governance and their banal and outmoded rituals of democratic
accountability, transparency, representivity (with all their
"baggage") can be thrown off and they (and we) can enter into that
blissful state of consensus decision making by means of the sanctified
apostolic group of (multi)stakeholders.
We can thus expect them to perform their incantatory rituals of faux
consultation and ceremonies of participation among the carefully
anointed "chosen" and thus reach the nirvana where they are in a
position to make their divinely and mystically conjoined
multistakeholder consecrated decisions for us all.
This particular "multistakeholder conference" has assigned itself the
task of developing "an agenda" and a "platform" for Internet Governance
specifically in the area of Cyber Security. It is clear from the
announcements leading up to the conference and the outcome statements
from the conference that the GCCS is meant to be a next step in the
on-going process of setting out the framework for "Global (Internet)
Governance" following on from the NetMundial, the Internet
Governance Forums, the NetMundial Initiative, and so on... but in
this case with a specific thematic interest in developing an agenda for
the global governance of the Internet in areas concerning Cyber
Security.
(Since this particular kind of quasi-, sort of, not quite "official",
but in fact (meant to be) more or less official and very very
influential (Internet) Governance activity, doesn't yet have a name,
I'm suggesting that we call them "unicorns"--beautiful mythical beasts;
beloved of illusionists, flim flam artists, and purveyors of fairy
tales; shifting shape at will; but which have the unfortunate quality
of disappearing as soon as one gets too close (or begins to ask serious
non-mystical questions...
So what of this particular "unicorn" the GCCS 15?
The fact that it was convened by the Dutch government, that it was the
fourth in a series, that many governments attended (but notably not
many outside of the charmed OECD circle) and that the meeting issued a
final statement which "received broad general support" after
"consultation" "with the attending stakeholders" suggests that
something of some significance took place. And clearly the intention is
that the meeting and the Outcome Statement/Chairman's Report will have
some status more significant than an ordinary trade or sectoral meeting
press release. In fact of course it is meant to be one those increasing
number of unofficial/official meetings of the form of the NetMundial;
i.e. not quite on the level of the clearly "official" WSIS+10
process, but having a normative and quasi-official status rather more
than say TED talks or an ordinary Internet technical convening.
As well, the activities of the designated/appointed/hired (by the
conference organizers) Civil Society interlocutor/coordinator has been
such as to give the "unicorn" the appearance of something with some
broader on-going significance as for example, through circulating to
the broader civil society e-lists the draft Outcome Document for
comment and input.
So I think that we can assume that the GCCS is meant to be one of that
increasing stable of multistakeholder global Internet Governance
unicorns whose intention is to replace more formal and "democratically
constituted" global Internet Governance assemblies and processes. (It
might be noted in passing that, the Chairman's Report while mentioning
"stakeholders" and "multistakeholders" as a central element of Internet
governance 24 times (in a nine page document), failed to mention
"democracy" or "democratic processes" even once.)
Why this matters of course, is because the clear intention is that this
unicorn (and more importantly its' "Chairman's Statement") is meant to
have a similar status to the NetMundial Outcome document i.e.
something that is widely quoted, referred to (for example by the
Internet Society) as a "foundational document", and meant to have the
status of some sort of soft international statement of Internet guiding
principles, deriving it's legitimacy directly from the fact of its
multistakeholder origination and its authentication through "broad
agreements" of the meetings' multistakeholder plenaries etc.
The question of course, is what legitimacy does this unicorn have on
its own terms as a "multistakeholder" process and thus what
significance or legitimacy can its outcome statement have beyond being
a statement by certain individuals selected on the basis of
non-transparent critieria, with no accountability to anyone other than
the funders, and thus presumably selected and designed to reinforce and
ratify already determined policy positions as determined by the
unicorn's organizers/sponsors/controlling agencies.
o The somewhat hasty and last-minute process of facilitating Civil
Society participation was completely lacking structures of transparency
or of accountability to any agency outside of the organizational and
decision making processes of the unicorn itself presumably under the
direct supervision of the sponsoring governmental bodies.
o The selection and contractual terms of reference of the Civil Society
interlocutor (co-Chair of the Advisory Committee) were completely
non-transparent and non-accountable to anyone other than the unicorn's
organizers/funders.
o The Civil Society interlocutor's organization receives primary
funding from several of the governments with dominant roles in Internet
Governance and thus strong interests in maintaining the current
Internet governance status quo
o The facilitation of CS participation was done through non-transparent
and non-accountable control over travel funding
o the holding of the editorial pen concerning CS inputs into the
documents were equally non-transparent nor accountable and were
transmitted again via the Civil Society interlocutor.
o The GCCG's civil society "Advisory Board", presumably selected on
the advice of the Interlocutor/co-Chair is notably not broadly
representative of CS active in the Internet Governance space for
example,
o it does not include representation from any of those who either
individually or organizationally refused agreement to the UNESCO
"Connecting the Dots" Outcome Document which deliberately chose to
reject a commitment to "democratic governance of the Internet" in
favour of "multistakeholder governance of the Internet";
o nor does it include any representatives from the Just Net
Coalition whose proposal for an Internet Social Forum has just
received wide acceptance and support in the context of the recently
held World Social Forum with 50,000 representatives of Civil
Society in attendance.
It is notable, but perhaps not surprising, given the above that there
would appear to have been no objection on the part of the Civil Society
Advisory Group to the failure of the unicorn to address the escalating
issues concerning those (human rather than "cyber") "security" issues
of most importance to the vast majority of Internet users-social and
economic inequality, job and income insecurity, and the concentration
of wealth and power in the global 1% facilitated through and by the
Internet; evidently accepting the bland generalities of a concern for
Internet "access" (as indicated in the Chairman's report) as an
adequate substitute.
Also, there appears from the proposed unicorn outcome document, to have
been no discussion on the relationship between "security" and "social
justice". Why for example, is the discussion concerning "cyber
security" only framed in military or law enforcement terms rather than
as is broadly seen as appropriate in global civil society, recognizing
that economic and social security for all, provide the only realistic
long term solution to the current cyber (and other) security threats.
Again we have an example of a purportedly "multistakeholder" process
which by its very nature is biased and which lacks any of the formal
processes of transparency and accountability out of which the
legitimacy of any governance process must be built. Yet we have the
clear intention of inserting this as an element in emerging Global
Internet Governance on the basis that it is "multistakeholder" and thus
has broad acceptance and legitimacy.
So dear readers, hold on to your hats - we are all in for a wild ride
on and through these mythical unicorns as we finally and irrevocably
are induced to give up any illusions of democratic governance of the
Internet (and most likely everything else) in favour of governance by
"multistakeholder processes" i.e. by the corporate and governmental 1%
and those camp followers willing to be turned into rent-a-mobs for the
price of an airplane ticket and a few nights in a 4 star hotel.
I must say that I think the folks in the backrooms doing the strategic
planning for the Internet Governance processes are a lot smarter than
their fellows across the hall looking after the TIPP processes, for
example. A few strategically placed small grants to selected compliant
"civil society" organizations (names available on request), a few
"concessions" on Human Rights issues in the area of free speech and
free expression (which notably are completely supportive of current
dominant government strategies for example, through the US State
Department and major corporate Internet business models as for example,
for Google and Facebook) and hey presto not only do you not
have to worry about Civil Society opposition but for the sake of the
grants and a piddling amount for travel funding you can be assured of
active, even ferocious support from "Civil Society".
Much better than worrying about leaks, and demo's, and angry
electorates as in the case of the TIPP and if anyone questions why for
example, the real economic and social issues attendant on Internet
Governance aren't being dealt with, your "Civil Society" friends will
say, but look at what we did achieved in the area of Human Rights
(albeit by knocking on open doors). Isn't that enough?
We look forward to seeing all of you who are somewhat uncomfortable
with these processes (and unwilling to be trampled into silence by
herds of rampaging unicorns) at the upcoming Internet Social Forum
where among other things we will be figuring out how to make the
Internet both democratically governed and a basis for ensuring
democratic governance in all global spheres.
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